Lights, camera, sustainability: Ontario's film, TV sets aim to go greener
CBC
A push is underway to make film and television production sets in Ontario more environmentally sustainable, with industry leaders saying more needs to be done to reduce the sector's carbon footprint by minimizing things like food waste and energy consumption.
"We need to make a change now and that change needs to be made urgently," said Ontario Film Commissioner Justin Cutler.
"We want to inform and educate the industry, work on best practice implementation and then measure our impact as we go forward."
The sector has made strides on sustainability in the past two years, said Cutler, for example by reusing props, costumes, designs and construction materials from production sets. But he and other industry leaders are setting their sights on higher targets for reducing energy use and waste, and a new report could be a roadmap to reaching that goal.
On Thursday, the Ontario Green Screen (OGS) released a four-year plan aiming to reduce greenhouse gas emissions on film and television productions across the province and transition to a "circular economy" — where resources are never thrown out but are reused, recycled and re-introduced as new products.
OGS, which consists of 30 government, industry, unions, guilds and trade association partners, launched in 2020 in an effort to promote a more sustainable production industry in the province.
The organization piloted two programs in the last two years to increase circularity within the industry and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. As part of that effort, OGS worked with a Toronto-based initiative to rescue unused set materials or materials that can be reused by local agencies in need.
Through that program, 9.8 metric tonnes of material were given a new life — that's approximately $33,000 worth of materials, said Cutler.
"That [also] helped production because they didn't have to pay the disposal fees for those goods and services, they were able to give those to others in need and keep those materials in use," Cutler said.
Production sets also worked with Second Harvest, a national service that rescues food that might otherwise end up in landfills and redistributes it to those in need, to reduce food waste among film crews.
Since 2019, Second Harvest has provided 39,000 meals from sets to local agencies valued at more than $140,000, Cutler said.
OGS industry co-chair Cynthia Lynch says by continuing to strengthen partnerships with community agencies, the sector will be able to maximize its sustainability efforts as part of the four-year plan.
"The thing about planting a tree is that the best time to do it was yesterday, but a good time to do it is today. I think the same holds true for the film and TV industry," said Lynch, who is also managing directer and counsel at FilmOntario.
"Perhaps there are things that could have been done earlier, but it's never too late to start."